Chapter 16A fine grey drizzle marked the start of Ibryen’s journey. He had wakened to it at his normal hour and had deliberately turned over and gone back to sleep. The previous day had been long not only metaphorically, in the changes it had spawned for him, but actually, in the length of time he had been awake. It had been drawn out to its fullest by the impromptu meeting in the Council Hall of almost every member of the community who was not on duty.
Ibryen’s followers formed a disciplined fighting unit, but they were such because they were also free individuals and resolute in their defence of that freedom. Many procedures and practices, both formal and informal, had developed over their time there in an attempt to ensure that the tensions, inevitable within such a community, were identified and aired before they could erupt into any seriously destructive form. For the most part these functioned well enough, but still much depended on the judgement and demeanour of Ibryen, Count of Nesdiryn by ancient statute and by common acclaim. When he opened the door of the ante-room where he had been talking with Marris and the others, to see the main chamber of the Council Hall filled with a large and silent crowd, he was both intimidated by what he knew he had to do, and heartened by the patient demeanour of his people.
As all there knew, he would have been acting fully within his authority if he had dismissed the gathering out of hand, harshly even, and instructed the various Company Commanders to attend on him the following day. Instead however, he gave a courteous acknowledgement to the man who had knocked on the door and stepped into the hall, signalling to the others to follow him.
Immediately, a questioning murmur began to rise from the crowd, but as he sought for somewhere to stand where he could see, and be seen, Ibryen spoke the honest thought then dominating his mind. ‘If you can, sit please.’ His hands beat them gently down. ‘It’s been a long and strange day for us all, and I’ve a feeling it’s going to be some time before it’s finished. I’m not inclined to spend the rest of it on my feet. Besides, you make the place look too full, standing up.’
His easy-humoured remarks and the consequent shuffling and rearranging of benches and tables lightened the darker tones of the atmosphere that had been building.
Not that the meeting went without difficulty. Studiously avoiding any reference to the Traveller’s strange gift and the mysterious call that had drawn him there, Ibryen explained the events of the day and submitted his intentions to the meeting as he had just agreed them with his cousins. He avoided too, the bleak analysis of the future of their present form of resistance that the day had forced him to face starkly.
Even without these mysterious and dark elements, the tale and its conclusions provoked extensive debate. There was universal delight at the news of Hagen’s death, but the presence of a stranger in the valley struck at the very roots of the community and the way it conducted itself, and even such news could not completely sweep aside concerns about the Traveller. Ibryen deliberately did not allow Rachyl and Hynard to say too much at first, sensing that it was the evidence of those who had accompanied them up on to the south ridge that would be the most telling. And so it proved, though tempers flared more than once, culminating in a circle suddenly clearing as Seeing Stones were angrily thrust into the hands of one individual by the leader of the team, with the advice, ‘Go and look for yourself,’ uttered in a tone that was far more menacing than the words themselves.
A signal from Ibryen prevented his cousins and Marris from intervening. Now above all, it was imperative that he receive his authority from his people and not they from him.
‘Go on!’ the man blasted to the entire meeting. ‘Get up there and look. Do you think that I — that any of us — wanted to see footsteps coming across the Hummock? Like it or not,’ and he pointed at the Traveller, ‘that man came from the south.’
The balance shifted and a reluctant acceptance began to seep into the crowd. The debate turned, almost gratefully, to Ibryen’s proposals that he should go into the mountains and that there should be no harrying raids against the Gevethen’s army this spring. As Hynard had predicted, the inclusion of Rachyl in his party stilled most of the doubts about the wisdom of Ibryen accompanying the Traveller, and the idea of unsettling the Gevethen by using rumour and inaction, eventually appealed greatly.
‘I intend to be away for no more than about two or three weeks,’ Ibryen concluded. ‘In the meantime, though no raids are to be mounted, all training must continue as usual, while vigilance must be redoubled. There’s always the chance that the Gevethen might seek to draw attention away from problems in Dirynhald by mounting a large expedition against us.’
This caused a stir, but Ibryen quietly crushed it before it gathered momentum. ‘That’s no more than we’ve expected and trained for every year. As agreed many times before, Marris has command in my absence. Has anyone any objection to that?’ There was no reply but the ensuing silence was unsatisfactory. He smiled and ploughed through it. ‘Yes, I know. He’s stricter than I am. But you all know your duties. Fulfil them properly and then the absence of Rachyl and me will only mean that our force is two fighters the less. Its heart and head will remain unaffected.’
Fastening his cape to keep the seeping rain out, and hitching his pack on to his back, Ibryen felt markedly less confident in the cool grey morning than he had in the warm gloaming of the Council Hall. He looked around at the mist-shrouded peaks. Still, the reasoning that had brought him to this point was sound enough even if it was directed at no particular conclusion. And too, he realized, the cause was still with him. Faint but quite definite, the strangeness that had carried him up to the ridge with such unforeseeable consequences was all about and through him. Not a sound, nor anything that he could define in words, but wilful and clear for all that, and tugging at him relentlessly. It was more urgent than before.
‘What do you hear, Count?’
It was the Traveller. Ibryen looked down at him in surprise. He had his pack on his back, much larger now than it had been, and he was wearing exactly the same clothes as the day before except that they were fastened more securely and a hood engulfed much of his face. Dressed thus it was even more difficult to judge how old he was.
‘Will you be dry in that?’ Ibryen asked.
The Traveller patted his attire in a proprietorial manner.
‘Drier and warmer than you by far, old man.’
Ibryen’s eyebrows rose at the epithet but no indignation could bloom in the light of the Traveller’s joviality.
‘Had it for years. Made for me by people who know about mountains.’ He winked knowingly. ‘And I’ve added one or two little things of my own.’ He returned immediately to his question. ‘Can you hear anything?’
Ibryen answered him seriously. ‘Only the sounds of the camp in the rain. And my own clothes creaking.’
‘But...’
‘But it’s there,’ Ibryen admitted, accepting the prompt. ‘No sound, but... something. And either it or my perceptions have changed. It’s clearer than it was, I’m sure, if clearer makes any sense.’ He countered with the same question. ‘And you? Can you hear anything?’
‘Oh yes,’ the Traveller replied darkly. ‘We mustn’t delay further.’
Ibryen was about to press him when the little man put his fingers to his mouth and blew a penetrating whistle, followed by a bellowing shout. ‘Come on, Rachyl. Move yourself!’
Ibryen flinched openly. He was about to advise the Traveller that it was not an act of wisdom to address Rachyl like that when his cousin appeared almost immediately, hastily fastening her cape about her. Ibryen prepared to intervene but, unexpectedly, she said, ‘I’m sorry, I’d forgotten to pack one or two things.’ As they set off she peered around into the mistiness and pulled a face. ‘I’d have preferred pleasanter weather,’ she said.
‘Better this way,’ Ibryen replied. ‘Fewer people will see us leave and we won’t have to fret about being caught against the skyline.’
When they reached the Council Hall, Marris and Hynard were waiting for them with some of the Company Commanders. There was little left to debate however, and their parting remarks were confined to minor details about the first part of the journey and the amount of supplies they were carrying. It was territory already well covered and quite unnecessary.
‘Mark your trail well,’ was Marris’s final offering, also unnecessary. ‘We’ll expect you back within the month. After that we’ll come looking for you.’ Then, after some cursory farewells, the trio left.
For the next few hours they walked on in silence. Neither the weather nor the terrain were conducive to conversation as the three trudged steadily up steep, grassy slopes and thence over tumbled piles of shattered rock and scree, all rendered treacherous by the rain. Thoughts were thus concentrated on the immediate problem of where to take the next footstep. Eventually they reached the ridge where Ibryen had rested on the previous day. It was greatly changed, the vast panorama of sunlit peaks having been swept into oblivion and replaced by rain-streaked greyness. Following the Traveller’s signal, they moved into the lee of an overhanging rock and sat down. The Traveller threw back his hood and puffed out his cheeks.
Ibryen and Rachyl exchanged an amused glance. ‘I thought you were used to mountains,’ Ibryen taunted.
The Traveller shook his head ruefully. ‘Not at this pace,’ he replied. ‘You two will wear me out.’
Rachyl nodded sagely, lips pursed. ‘We’re not mountain folk by birth, but we spend almost all our time either fighting or training amongst these crags. I suppose we move a lot faster than you’re used to.’
The Traveller looked from one to the other, his expression pained. ‘You mean this is the best you can do?’ he asked.
Rachyl’s face became indignant, but Ibryen laughed softly and raised his hands in mock surrender. ‘I think you’re fighting beyond your weight, Rachyl,’ he said. Then, turning to the Traveller, ‘I’ll admit to being the slowest, so I’ll have to ask your indulgence — younger to elder.’
This time the Traveller laughed. It was a sound full of joy. ‘Indulgence granted, Count,’ he said. ‘I’m certainly not going to fight beyond my weight. I’ll leave that to the young folk.’
He gestured for silence. ‘Let me listen for a moment to see if I can get some indication of which way to go next.’ He looked at Ibryen significantly, but made no further comment. Ibryen closed his eyes.
Slowly silence formed about him. Then, for the briefest instant, it seemed that he could hear the trembling movement of each raindrop cutting through the air, followed by its splattering impact against the rocks. A low pulsing rumbling in the background he sensed was Rachyl, though no reasoning could have led him to that conclusion as he knew she would be sitting still and silent as the Traveller had asked. But scarcely had this impression formed than it was gone, and the silence returned.
And with it, the call. No stronger than it had been when he had been waiting for the Traveller an hour or so earlier. But it was clearer. As was the urgency that hung all about it. Suddenly he was filled with a desperate fear, and his mind was awash with strange images: duty, a long struggle ending, failure, an endless caring. Yet, though they could have been, they were not his. And there were other feelings too, deeply alien, for which no words could begin to exist. We mustn’t delay further. The Traveller’s words came back to him, full of force now.
Then a new fear arose abruptly. This time he knew it for his own. Had the years of leading his people in their seemingly futile resistance against the Gevethen finally taken their toll and plunged him into insanity?
He opened his eyes. Rachyl was gazing into the mist, one hand idly playing with a lock of damp hair. The Traveller was sitting with his head slightly canted and his hand still raised for silence. His eyes flicked towards Ibryen and he moved a finger to his lips.